|
City of Carmel Homepage
City of Carmel
Utilities Homepage
Awards
History
Customer Service
New Accounts and Billing
Pay Your Water Bill on-line
Water
Operations, Distribution
& Field Services
Water Treatment
Wastewater Treatment
Sanitary Sewer
System
Household Hazardous Waste
Recycling
WaterSense
Irrigation
Other Utilities Links
Contact Us |


Irrigation
Irrigation Recommendations for New
Development
Carmel, IN
Irrigation System
Designer:
A qualified irrigation designer or
irrigation consultant shall design the system for efficient and uniform
distribution of water. “Qualified” means certified by the Irrigation
Association of America:
Certified Irrigation Contractor (CIC)
Certified Landscape Irrigation
Auditor (CLIA)
Certified Landscape Irrigation
Manager (CLIM)
Certified Irrigation Designer
(CID)
Certified Water Conservation
Manager - Landscape (CWCM)
System Design:
- The system shall
be comprised of either:
-
Drip/micro-irrigation components that allow for higher distribution
uniformity and lower evaporation and runoff.
- The design and
layout of the emission devices provides for zero overspray across or
onto a street, public driveway or sidewalk, parking area, building,
fence or adjoining property. Overspray may occur during the
operation of the irrigation system due to the actual wind conditions
that differ from the design criteria.
System
Controller:
The system should use a
controller that has multi-program capability with at least four start times
(for multiple repeat soak cycles) and run time adjustments in one-minute
increments. The controller programming (scheduling) should be managed to
respond to the changing need for water in the landscape.
Design features
- Follow all
ordinances relating to irrigation systems including the installation of
backflow devices.
- A design that
results in uniform and efficient coverage. Sprinkler head spacing should
be a minimum of “head-to-head” (minimum 50% of diameter) unless the
coverage is designed for wind de-rating. Wind de-rating should be based
on average nighttime wind speed. Design to avoid overspray onto
hardscapes, fences, buildings and adjoining property.
- Have separate
station/zones (hydrozones) for areas with dissimilar water or scheduling
requirements.
- Have a minimum of
a rain sensor to suspend irrigation during wet weather conditions.
- In addition to the
rain sensor, use any or all water-conserving devices such as:
- Check valves
to minimize low-head drainage
- Pressure
regulators or pressure compensating screens, stems or nozzles to
control high pressure.
- Environmental
sensors that can actively measure weather conditions to determine
daily plant water need.
- Soil moisture
sensors to monitor soil moisture and suspend irrigation if the
moisture reserve in the root zone is significantly above the
allowable depletion limit.
- For commercial
installations: a water meter dedicated to measuring only landscape water
use. A meter with a flow rate output signal for interfacing with the
controller is recommended as it can help detect leaks and manage water
use.
- Install a master
valve to stop unscheduled flow of irrigation water.
Irrigation/Irrigation Recommendations
for New Development.pdf

|